NATIONAL CENTER FOR ELECTRON MICROSCOPY -- AN ANNIVERSARY STORY

By Lynn Yarris, LCYarris@LBL.GOVLBL Research Review August 1994

THE PAIR OF BLUE TOWERS RISING TO A height of nearly 100
feet have become a Strawberry Canyon landmark. Inside those towers are the two
electron microscopes that blazed a trail for the rest of the world to follow.
In celebrating the tenth anniversary of the National Center for Electron
Microscopy (NCEM), the LBL staff there can take pride in a storied past and
look forward to an even better future.

Constructed at a cost of $7.5 million, NCEM was officially dedicated on
September 30, 1983. That date also marked the unveiling of the Atomic
Resolution Microscope (ARM), the first instrument in the world capable of
showing individual atoms in a sample. ARM joined the High Voltage Electron
Microscope, which had been in operation since 1981, to give NCEM an
unprecedented one-two technological punch that each year draws users from
across the nation and around the globe. Among these users are industrial
researchers with such high-tech giants as IBM, Intel, Hewlett-Packard, General
Motors and Xerox; university researchers from such leading institutes as MIT,
Cal Tech, Georgia Tech, Stanford, and Carnegie-Mellon; and federal researchers
from sister national laboratories and from other top government science
agencies such as NASA and NIST.

These and other users are drawn to NCEM like pilgrims to Mecca because electron
microscopy has become the keystone in materials sciences. A highly skilled
blend of science, art, and technical craft, with maybe just a touch of luck,
this arcane field has led to the solving of material failure problems that in
the past caused bridges to collapse, planes to crash, waste containment vessels
to leak, and hosts of other less dramatic but still very important incidents.
Electron microscopy has also led to the development of new materials and
technologies that have advanced the fields of manufacturing, communications,
transportation, and data processing. In many of these achievements, NCEM played
a central role.

NCEM was started by LBL metallurgist Gareth Thomas, who became the scientific
director of the facility when it opened. Another LBL scientist, Ken Westmacott,
became NCEM's first managing director. Both Thomas and Westmacott retired from
their respective duties in 1991. The two jobs were combined and Uli Dahmen, a
materials scientist and engineer, and an expert in microstructure
crystallography, took over.

"Gareth Thomas provided the vision that got NCEM started and Ken Westmacott
established the infrastructure that made it the premier facility of its kind,"
Dahmen says. "My mission is to keep us at the scientific forefront."

The electron microscope was invented in 1931 by German physicist Ernst Ruska
while he was working on the development of an oscilloscope. Its operation is
similar to that of a conventional microscope except that instead of shooting
visible light through a specimen, it shoots a beam of fast-moving electrons.
Because electrons have a much shorter wavelength than visible light photons,
they can be used to "resolve" or bring into view much smaller things. For
example, whereas the best visible light microscopes magnify objects some 2,000
times, today's best electron microscopes can magnify objects a million times or
more.

Left, a three-dimensional view of the atomic structure of the mineral
staurolite, revealing the positions of the silicon, aluminum, and
oxygen atoms. Right, an atomic resolution micrograph of an interface
between aluminum and germanium.

Sampling of additional images produced by
NCEM microscopes (163K File)The drawback to electrons
is that they must be highly energized in order to
penetrate anything. A glass lens is too dense for an electron beam to pierce.
Consequently, electromagnetic lenses must be used to focus the beam, and the
specimens that are to be imaged must be held in a vacuum chamber. Both the HVEM
and the ARM generate their electron beams in particle accelerators mounted on
top of the long tubes that house their respective lenses. The older HVEM
produces a beam of 1.5 million electron volts (1.5 MeV) -- still the highest
voltage available in the U.S. -- which enables it to penetrate much thicker
specimens and operate in a broader range of conditions than any of its
contemporaries. The ARM produces beams of up to 1 MeV, which means it does not
quite match the penetration ability of the HVEM. In microscopy, however, the
most important issue is resolution -- how well does the instrument "see." The
HVEM's resolution is only 3.5 angstroms -- an angstrom is one ten-billionth of
a meter (four billionths of an inch) or about the width of a hydrogen atom --
which means it cannot see atoms. The ARM was the first microscope to break the
"two-angstrom" barrier, zooming in on a resolution of 1.6 angstroms. With its
extremely stable high-voltage supply and objective lens, the ARM produces clear
images -- black and white dots against a gray background -- that show
individual atoms joined together in crystal lattices. It is the pattern in
which atoms are arranged in a crystal that give materials their unique
properties and determine how they react chemically.

"You won't find the things available here duplicated elsewhere in the country,"
Thomas declared at the time NCEM opened. In the following years, his case was
made even stronger. The HVEM was equipped with a special sample chamber that
made it possible for scientists to study specimens during heating, cooling,
straining, or exposure to controlled but realistic atmospheric conditions. The
ARM's performance was enhanced with the addition of a high-angle "tilt stage"
that allows full resolution images to be obtained along any axis through a
sample -- something no other electron microscope offers. Both microscopes were
further complemented (and their overall performances improved) with new
advanced computer systems for sophisticated image simulations and faster
electron micrograph processing to enable researchers to correctly interpret the
structures being imaged. The software developed at NCEM has been widely
distributed to other electron microscope labs.

Finally, a third major microscope was added to the NCEM family, the Analytical
Electron Microscope (AEM), a smaller instrument -- 200,000 electron volt (200
keV) -- equipped with a special x-ray detector as well as other features to
provide information on chemical composition and on atomic structure and
bonding. The AEM can be used independently or in conjunction with the ARM or
the HVEM.